Tue Aug 30 2011 08:30You Can't Be Serious: Addendum: I Should Be In That Spoof:
After messing around with the IMDB movie connections for the original "You Can't Be Serious", I've decided to measure a movie's spoofability with a ratio instead of just counting the number of times it's been spoofed. Counting spoofs only measures the impact a movie has on our culture. Star Wars is the most-spoofed movie by far, but also the most-referenced movie by far. Measuring the ratio of spoofs to earnest references will find movies whose impact on culture was primarily to give us something to spoof.

(I came into this hating the word "spoof", BTW, and the more I type it the more I hate it.)

I calculated the spoof/reference ratio for all IMDB entries with more than one spoof and more than 5 references. Surprisingly, the movies with spoof/reference ratios near or above unity aren't movies; they're almost all TV shows:

Calculating the average spoof/reference ratio is an iffy proposition, but for movies with a lot of references, it's around 0.15.

What movies have a very low ratio? Are there movies that are referenced, say, 100 times more often than they're spoofed? Once again, the question of what distinguishes a "reference" from a "spoof" rears its mediocre-looking head, but maybe it cancels out when we're calculating a ratio between the two. Let's find out.

Movie

Ratio

Spoofs

References

Sex, Lies, and Videotape

0.01

2

138

Deep Throat

0.02

2

92

"Little House on the Prairie"

0.02

2

87

"Hogan's Heroes"

0.02

2

83

Guess Who's Coming to Dinner

0.03

2

77

Brazil

0.03

2

73

The Searchers

0.03

2

73

THX 1138

0.03

2

71

"Green Acres"

0.03

2

69

"Will & Grace"

0.03

2

64

Vertigo

0.03

8

253

Mr. Smith Goes to Washington

0.03

2

63

Sleeping Beauty

0.03

2

62

"Two and a Half Men"

0.03

2

61

A Wild Hare

0.03

2

60

The Way We Were

0.03

2

60

To Kill a Mockingbird

0.03

2

60

Tootsie

0.03

2

59

"Captain Kangaroo"

0.03

2

58

Sophie's Choice

0.03

2

58

I was skeptical about this list, but upon investigation it's pretty good! Certainly better results than I got on Sunday. Sex, Lies, and Videotape the movie wasn't that influential, but it has one of the most influential titles in cinema history. Similarly for Mr. Smith Goes to Washington: lots of title references and lots of conspicuously visible movie posters. A Wild Hare was the origin of the phrase "What's up, Doc?". Guess Who's Coming to Dinner scores whenever a character wryly cracks that phrase at the end of a scene. And so on.